Motorola Mobility
Holdings Inc’s Xoom tablet will sell for an unsubsidized $799 at
Verizon Wireless, with WiFi-only version priced at around $600 price,
chief executive Sanjay Jha said on Wednesday.
"Competing with Apple you have to deliver premium products," Jha said, adding Xoom software was also upgradable.
Motorola is a latecomer to the surging market for tablet computers, which was created by Apple’s iPad last year, and is expected to reach total sales volumes of around 50 million units this year.
Jha
said nearly all Motorola products will use Google’s Android software
this year, which could get a boost from Nokia’s pact to start using
Microsoft’s software.
"I am as
focused on Android as I ever have been. As a result of Nokia adopting
Microsoft it’s possible that some of the other players concentrate on
Android," Jha told reporters in Barcelona on sidelines of Mobile World
Congress trade show.
He said he hoped alternative operating systems to Android would still stay on the market.
"I hope there will be at least three or four. I love Android, but I hope as hell there won’t be just one."
Jha also said the company was looking at possibly having its own application store.
(Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)